![]() |
| 1/23/26 Henry (reference photo by Lori Merriam) |
Urban sketching: It's not a hobby; it's a lifestyle.
![]() |
| 1/23/26 Henry (reference photo by Lori Merriam) |
![]() |
| 1/30/26 Panama Hotel Cafe, Chinatown/International District |
The Panama Hotel Café is one of our favorite places to
sketch. Roy, Mary Jean and I hadn’t been able to get together since before Christmas,
so it was especially fun to meet up there for a morning of art play. My view (at left)
wasn’t especially fun to sketch, but I didn’t care; the Panama’s ambiance is
quiet, relaxing and, we all agreed, comfortable as a second home.
More fun was when we began our portrait party. Taking turns as the sitter, we made blind contour drawings and also sketched with our non-dominant hand. Hilarious both ways!
![]() |
| Mary Jean with my right hand |
![]() |
| Mary Jean as blind contour |
![]() |
| Roy as blind contour |
![]() |
| Roy with my right hand |
For lunch we tried E-Jae Pak-Mor, a Thai restaurant that had received a favorable review recently in the Seattle Times. With many items on the menu that I don’t see on typical Thai menus, it was clear why the Times called it one of Seattle’s best restaurants. I hastily sketched my Pakmor salad bowl before devouring it.
![]() |
| E-Jae Pak Mor (journal page incorrectly dated) |
Eating and drawing with good friends – does it get any better?
![]() |
| 1/28/26 photo reference (Derwent Drawing pencil in Zeta sketchbook) |
Wanting to finish up that old Stillman & Birn Beta
sketchbook, which has a substantial tooth, I had been making my comfy, monochrome sketches in it. Although toothy paper is not usually recommended
with soft colored pencils, I like it – the visible tooth imparts a rougher,
unpolished look.
I had been thinking, though, how dreamy Derwent Drawing pencils would feel on smooth paper. After the Beta book was full, I pulled out a Stillman & Birn Zeta book, and holy-moly, my comfy, old robe grew a fleece lining! Not only did these sketches prevent me from doomscrolling; they quietly lulled me toward bedtime with their soothing comfort. I mean, seriously: Is there anything so relaxing as a soft pencil on smooth paper?
During these difficult times, when we’re bombarded with upsetting news daily, it’s reassuring to know that self-care can come from a colored pencil.
![]() |
| 1/29/26 photo reference (two Drawing pencils used in this one) |
![]() |
| Eleven years to finish this sketchbook. |
Only a few pages remained in this old Stillman & Birn
Beta sketchbook, which I began 11 years ago. I just finished filling
them with my doomscrolling prevention program and other recent sketches
made from photos at home.
![]() |
| The first several pages has sketches from Chandler O'Leary's workshop. |
Thumbing through it before finally putting the book away on my completed sketchbook shelves, I felt a wave of nostalgia, poignancy and even sadness. The very first sketches in the book were those I made in an urban sketching workshop with Chandler O’Leary. They’re dated June 27, 2015. On a very hot day, we looked for compositions and made thumbnails at Lake Union Park. My memories, embedded in the pages, are bittersweet now because Chandler died in 2023 at the age of 41.
![]() |
| Lots of still lives |
![]() |
| Exercises from Gal Cohen's online workshop |
![]() |
| Testing various water-soluble techniques |
For many years now, my goal has been to minimize the number of sketchbooks I have in progress because I prefer to work through each one chronologically as much as possible. (That might be the goal, but I’m sure I still have a dozen going on concurrently.) I don’t like wide gaps of time within a book, and I certainly don’t want to take 11 years to fill one! Still, looking through this old Beta gave me a time capsule effect that I don’t get from looking at a sketchbook that I’ve filled in a few months. It’s precious in a different way.
![]() |
| Drippy acrylic inks? |
![]() |
| 1/28/26 photo reference (Chocolate Derwent Drawing pencil in Stillman & Birn Beta sketchbook) |
Sometimes my Doomscrolling Prevention Program turns
into simple media appreciation.
I began making monochrome mark-making exercises with an Ivory Black Derwent Drawing pencil because the set happened to be handy on my desk. It seemed like a good substitute for a soft graphite pencil, and it is. After having made several sketches with it, though, it’s much more than that: It’s like pulling on a comfy, old robe.
![]() |
| 1/27/26 photo reference (Ivory Black Drawing pencil) |
Although my monochrome sketches began as loosening-up exercises inspired by Orla Stevens’ YouTube, they morphed into value studies and then into basic monochrome sketches. It’s been a long time since I sketched in monochrome, and I’d forgotten how much I love this elegant simplicity, especially while “wearing” a comfy, old robe.
![]() |
| 11/19/25 |
![]() |
| 11/19/25 |
When I first began spending time in the memory care area, I
used to feel uncertain about sketching the residents, wondering if it was
invasive. While I have no issue with sketching random fellow passengers on public transportation, I feel more protective toward the residents. The
more I get to know them as individuals, however, the more I felt compelled to honor
them by drawing them. Even sharing the sketches publicly is an acknowledgment: They
live, they exist, they are not hidden away.
![]() |
| 11/10/25 |
![]() |
| 11/27/25 |
![]() |
| 11/29/25 |
![]() |
| 12/2/25 |
![]() |
| 12/9/25 |
![]() |
| 12/13/25 |
![]() |
| 12/16/25 |
![]() |
| 12/20/25 |
![]() |
| 12/22/25 |
![]() |
| 12/28/25 |
![]() |
| 1/27/26 Green Lake Park |
After a couple of weeks – weeks! – of much-needed daily
sunshine, a thin but consistent cloud cover finally came in on Tuesday. On my
walk to Green Lake, I thought about how I could challenge myself in all that
flat light: In the same way that a “nothing” view helps me to focus on values,
an especially bleak, colorless one would force me to eke out both the color and
the values.
Using the values-based color ideas that I’ve been consciously thinking about lately, I’ll be darned if the color temperature concepts I had been thinking about last year crept in unconsciously! I didn’t notice until I was done. Huh – I guess my brain had been listening after all.
Color notes: Shown below is my current daily-carry watercolor pencil palette of mostly Museum Aquarelles and one Derwent Inktense. (No. 106 is crossed out because I eliminated it during trials when I realized it was too close to 599 to be useful.) It’s an amusing palette: Except for Inktense 760 (Deep Violet), which I have used frequently, all the other colors are ones that I chose by length, deliberately looking for pencils I have rarely used beyond swatching. I’m sure I’ve never used them for urban sketching because they don’t “match” anything I would normally see in my everyday Seattle environment. I’m having a ball using unusual hues without feeling like I’m randomly throwing in whatever.
![]() |
| Current everyday-carry pencil palette |